The Frontier - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"That's as may be, captain. But it's one of the things one doesn't think about. I'm staying."
"And you, Farmer Saboureux? You're running a big risk, if they prove that you set fire to your farm."
"I'm staying," growled the peasant, laconically.
"And you, tramp?"
Old Poussiere had not finished eating the piece of bread which he had taken from his wallet. He was listening and observing, with eyes wide open and an evident effort to attend. He examined the captain, his uniform, the braid upon his sleeve, seemed to reflect on mysterious things, stood up and seized a rifle.
"That's right, Poussiere," grinned Morestal. "You know your country right enough, once it needs defending."
A man had made the same movement as the tramp, almost at the same time.
One more division in the gun-rack was empty.
It was Duvauchel, still rather unsteady on his pins, but wearing an undaunted look.
"What, Duvauchel!" asked Captain Daspry. "Aren't we deserting?"
"You're getting at me, captain! Let the beggars clear out of France first! I'll desert afterwards."
"But you've only one arm that's any good."
"A greaser's arm, captain ... and a French greaser's at that ... is worth two, any day."
"Pa.s.s me one of them rifles," said the gardener's son. "I know my way about with 'em."
Duvauchel began to laugh:
"You too, sonnie? You want one? You'll see, the babes at the breast will be rising up next, like the others. Lord, but it makes my blood boil to think that they're in France!"
All followed the captain, who allotted them a post along the parapet.
The women busied themselves in placing ammunition within reach of the marksmen.
Marthe was left alone with her husband. She saw that the scene had stirred him. In the way in which those decent folk realized their duty and performed it without being compelled to, simply and spontaneously, there was that sort of greatness which touches a man to the very depths of his soul.
She said to him:
"Well, Philippe?"
His face was drawn; he did not reply.
She continued:
"Well, go.... What are you waiting for? No one will notice your flight.... Be quick.... Take the opportunity while it's here...."
They heard the captain addressing his lieutenant:
"Keep down your head, Fabregues, can't you? They'll see you, if you're not careful...."
Marthe seized Philippe's arm and, bending towards him:
"Now confess that you can't go ... that all this upsets your notions ...
and that your duty is here ... that you feel it."
"There they are! There they are!" said a voice.
"Yes," said Captain Daspry, searching the road through the orifice of a loop-hole, "yes, there they are!... At six hundred yards, at most ...
It's the vanguard.... They are skirting the pool and they haven't a notion that ..."
A sergeant came to tell him that the enemy had hoisted a gun on the slope of the pa.s.s. The officer was alarmed, but old Morestal began to laugh:
"Let them bring up as many guns as they please!... They can only take up positions which we command and which I have noted. A few good marksmen are enough to keep them from placing a battery."
And, turning to his son, he said to him, quite naturally, as though nothing had ever parted them:
"Are you coming, Philippe? We'll demolish them between us."
Captain Daspry interfered:
"Don't fire! We are not discovered yet. Wait till I give the order....
There'll be time enough later...."
Old Morestal had moved away.
Philippe walked resolutely towards the gate that led to the garden, to the open country. But he had not taken ten steps, when he stopped. He seemed to be vaguely suffering; and Marthe, who had not left his side, Marthe, anxious, full of mingled hope and apprehension, watched every phase of the tragic struggle:
"All the past is calling on you, Philippe; all the love for France that the past has bequeathed to you. Listen to its voice."
And, replying to every possible objection:
"Yes, I know, your intelligence rebels against it. But is one's intelligence everything?... Obey your instinct, Philippe.... It's your instinct that is right."
"No, no," he stammered, "one's instinct is never right...."
"It is right. But for that, you would be far away by now. But you can't go. Your whole being refuses to go. Your legs have not the strength for flight."
The Col du Diable was pouring forth troops and more troops, whose swarming ma.s.ses showed along the slope. Others must be coming by the Albern Road; and, on every side, along every path and through every gap, the men of Germany were invading the soil of France.
The vanguard reached the high-road, at the end of the etang-des-Moines.
There was a dull roll of the drum; and, suddenly, in the near silence, a hoa.r.s.e voice barked out a German word of command.
Philippe started as though he had been struck.
And Marthe clung to him, pitilessly:
"Do you hear, Philippe? Do you understand? The German speech on French soil! Their language forced upon us!"
"Oh, no!" he said. "That can't be.... That will never be!"